Participatory workshops as a tool for building inclusivity in New Towns in Africa.
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Date
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NL
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Delft
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1875-0192
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EDOC
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Abstract
Africa is currently the fastest-urbanizing continent in the world. As part of this
rapid growth, New Towns are increasingly employed by private developers as
a means of providing well-serviced urban environments to middle- and upperincome
groups. These comprehensively-planned New Towns are often seen
in contrast to the perceived ‘chaos’ and ‘congestion’ of large African cities. As a
result, two urban forms, the highly controlled New Towns and the unregulated
settlements at their edges, engage in complex social and economic exchanges,
but remain spatially segregated and socially exclusive. Current research points
to the need for an alternative approach to top-down New Town planning in
Africa.
Participatory workshops are one alternative that can offer planners access
to local knowledge that is otherwise difficult to access. This paper explores
the potential of short-term reflective, design, and serious gaming workshops
by reflecting on the experiences of the authors in four recent workshops.
The paper evaluates the effectiveness of these workshops as useful tools to
increase inclusivity in African New Towns by bringing together stakeholders
with competing agendas and supporting open discussion, negotiation, and
informed decision-making. The paper concludes that participation from
stakeholder groups that would normally be marginalized from the planning
process (such as current residents, temporary users, and residents of adjacent
unregulated communities), can offer new insights to planning bodies and
inform more inclusive New Towns across the continent.
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Journal
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281-300
Citation
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Research in urbanism series (RiUS); 6